gpending, pending

Command

pending displays a list of all file operations scheduled
to occur when your system is next rebooted.
It also gives you the opportunity to delete each of those pending file
operations.
You can schedule such operations with the -d option of
mv and rm.

gpending is a graphical version of the
pending utility. It displays a dialog showing the
pending delete and rename operations in a format similar to
the -v option described below. To refresh this display, click
the Refresh button. To delete one or more operations, select those
operations and click the Delete button. To delete all pending
operations, click the Delete All button. When using
Delete All, you should be careful to be sure that you actually want
to prevent these operations from being performed.

deletes all pending operations without asking for confirmation. When using
this option, you should be careful to be sure that you actually want to
prevent these operations from being performed.

-l

lists all pending operations without prompting for deletion. No operations
are deleted with this option.

-v

displays pending operations in a verbose format. This format consists of up
to four fields. The first field is either Delete or
Rename indicating the type of operation. The second field is the
file name being deleted or renamed. The third and fourth fields are only
used for rename operations.
The third field is either to or replacing and
indicates whether or not the target of the rename operation is to be
overwritten if it already exists. When this field has a value of
replacing, the target file will be overwritten if it exits.
When it has a value of to, the target file will not be
overwritten.
Finally, the fourth field is the target of the rename operation.